Reconcilable Differences
Ana Leigh
SIX YEARS VANISHED IN A HEARTBEAT…as Dave gazed down at the unconscious Patricia Manning. But the squad commander of the Special Ops unit had to steel himself against this irresistible woman who'd walked out on him…and was now up to her beautiful neck in a deadly game of international terror.HOW MANY NIGHTS HAD SHE DREAMED ABOUT HIM?Dave Cassidy was back in her life, sweeping her from harm's way, but he believed she was part of a global conspiracy and she had to prove him wrong. Winning his trust again was Trish's most important mission as danger and desire collided between a man and a woman determined to turn the mistakes of the past into a promise for the future….
His fingers itched to brush aside the strands of jet-black hair that clung in silky tendrils to her forehead and cheeks.
Six years had not marred the patrician perfection that was Patricia Hunter, thought Agent David Cassidy.
She had those same high cheekbones, delicate jaw and full lips. And he knew that beneath those thickly tipped lashes lay the most incredibly blue eyes he’d ever looked into. Eyes that could mesmerize a man’s soul as easily as they haunted his mind.
But this no longer was the woman he had worshiped. The woman who had lain in his arms as they planned their future together—pledged their love to one another with words and their bodies. This was not the woman whose memory he’d fought unsuccessfully to exorcise from his heart.
The Trish Hunter he’d known no longer existed. The woman before him, Patricia Manning, was a stranger to him….
Reconcilable Differences
Ana Leigh
www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)
ANA LEIGH
is a Wisconsin native with three children and five grandchildren. From the time of the publication of her first novel in 1981, Ana successfully juggled her time between her chosen career and her hobby of writing, until she officially retired in September 1994 to devote more time to her “hobby.” In the past she has been a theater cashier (who married the boss), the head of an accounting department, a corporate officer and the only female on the board of directors of an engineering firm.
This New York Times bestselling author received a Romantic Times Career Achievement Award nomination for Storyteller of the Year in 1991, the BOOKRAK 1995-1996 Best Selling Author Award, the Romantic Times 1995-1996 Career Achievement Award and the Romantic Times 1996–1997 Career Achievement Award for Historical Storyteller of the Year. Her novels have been distributed worldwide, including Africa, China and Russia.
To Patti,
the heroine of all my novels.
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Epilogue
Chapter 1
Patricia Manning leaned back in her chair and stared with contempt at the man seated opposite her. The audacity of Robert Manning held no limitations. “Go to North Africa with you! You are completely insane.”
The mere sight of her husband turned her stomach, despite his suave handsomeness. Everything about Robert Manning was smooth, from the top of his three-hundred-dollar haircut to the tips of his imported Italian leather shoes.
“Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m busy.”
“You are so impetuous, my dear. At least listen to the proposition I have to offer before jumping to your usual hasty conclusions.”
“Save your propositions for the hookers who service you, Robert.”
His thin lips narrowed in an amused smile. “Still the same uptight, frigid princess you always were, aren’t you, Trish?”
“And you, Robert, are still the same perverted degenerate whom I can’t bear to have touch me. Now that we’ve recounted both of our ‘virtues,’ let’s not waste any more of my time. I have work to do. Good day.”
He didn’t budge when she reached for her telephone. “How badly do you want a divorce, Trish?”
What a joke that was! She paused dialing long enough to offer a contemptuous glance. “Some more of your sadism, Robert?”
“I’ll give it to you if you go with me.”
“Is this another of those cat-and-mouse games that you delight in playing, Robert?”
“I’m serious. It’s important you go with me.”
She replaced the phone in its cradle and leaned back in her chair. “Why is it so important I go with you?”
“Appearances. A lot’s at stake here.”
“Is this company business?”
“Certainly. Your father’s aware of it. He thinks it’s a good idea for you to go with me.”
“He hasn’t mentioned it to me.”